"The Dazzle as Question" "uses the time-based nature of digital media to examine the construction of a lyric voice in new media. Through the voice of an 'old school artist' fascinated by computers and their potential for artistic expression, the poem uses the rhetoric of left and right sides of the brain to create a kind of cyborg voice by blending the logical capabilities of the computer and left side of the brain with the creative artistic human side. Part of this construction is evoked by the images of fountain pens, a writing technology iconically associated with poets (writing in solitude, as their imagination soars), and a desktop mouse (inscribing binary code onto bitmapped metaphorical interfaces). If writing allowed the transition of the lyric poem from the public to the private domain, does the networked computer reverse that, or is it the self constructed by these technologies that changes?
As you read this poem, notice how the speaker's thought patterns change progressively over time, as each line is delivered through time and spatial portioning. For example, see how the language captured in the image above reads differently as displayed over time as the poem plays. And as you witness the human/machine hybridization of the language in the poem, consider whether what you're listening to is a heartbeat or a metronome." -- From I Love E-Poetry
2 COPIES IN THE NEXT
Published in 2001 by frAme in Issue 5.
Nottingham Trent University, with the permission of Sue Thomas, gave this copy of the work to the Electronic Literature Lab in Spring 2016.
PUBLICATION TYPE
Online Journal
COPY MEDIA FORMAT
Web
Published in 2002 by Poems That GO in Volume 10.
This copy was given to Megan Sapner Ankerson and Ingrid Ankerson in Spring 2019.
PUBLICATION TYPE
Journal